The 3 plays in sports everybody will be talking about today

Good morning! Here are the plays everybody will be talking about
on Friday:

Cardinals pick up a huge win in controversial
fashion. As the Cardinals were tied with the Reds, 3-3,
with two outs in the bottom of the ninth and a runner on first,
Yadier Molina seemingly hit a ground-rule double that would have
given the Cards runners on second and third. But the umpires
didn't see the ball go over the wall and hit an advertising sign
behind it. Matt Carpenter scored all the way from first, and it
was game over. Even though everybody watching — minus the umpires
— seemed to know it was a ground-rule double, the Reds waited too
long to challenge the call. By the time Reds manager Bryan Price
came out to challenge, the umpires were gone, and it was game
over (read more here).

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Canada wins World Cup of Hockey with short-handed goal in
final minute. Team Canada and Team Europe were tied 1-1
in the final minute of Game 2. Europe had a power play and
seemingly had a good shot to even the best-of-three series at
1-1. But then Team Canada's top players struck. Just two minutes
after Patrice Bergeron evened the game at 1-1, Brad Marchand
finished off Europe with his tournament-best fifth goal, and it
came short-handed.

Ryder Cup heckler owns Team Europe. Rory McIlroy
and Henrik Stenson were having trouble making a 12-foot putt
during a practice round at the Ryder Cup. They missed six times
between the two of them. That's when a fan announced that even he
could make the putt. So Justin Rose challenged the heckler: Make
the putt, and Rose would give him $100. The heckler made the
putt. The Ryder Cup hasn't even started yet, and Team USA already
has a symbolic 1-0 lead (read
more here).